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Tampa Tarot: an experiment in community storytelling
Autor(es): Tripp, Stephanie
Publicado por: Centro de Literatura Portuguesa; Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra
URLpersistente: URI:http://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/44353
DOI: DOI:https://doi.org/10.14195/2182-8830_6-1_14
Accessed : 24-Jan-2021 16:49:40
digitalis.uc.ptimpactum.uc.pt
Vol. 6.1 (2018) Electronic Literature: Affiliations
Editors: Rui Torres Manuel Portela
M A T L I T 6 . 1 ( 2 0 1 8 ) : 1 9 9 - 2 0 7 . I S S N 2 1 8 2 - 8 8 3 0 D O I : 1 0 . 1 4 1 9 5 / 2 1 8 2 - 8 8 3 0 _ 6 - 1 _ 1 4
Tampa Tarot: An Experiment in Community Storytelling Stephanie Tripp THE UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA
A B S T R A C T
Tampa Tarot combines web-based interactive storytelling and an Augmented Reality (AR) feature that displays virtual tarot cards on users’ smart phones in specific geographical locations throughout the city. The project attempts to
answer the following question: In a world of diffuse and fragmented media, where old places and stories are displaced and obscured by layers of discon-nected images and a growing, changing population, how do we understand who we are as a community? Emphasizing the intrinsically social and historical char-acter of the tarot, the project employs the narrative structure of cartomancy (card reading) as a form of community storytelling.
K E Y W O R D S
Tarot; Tampa; community; storytelling; narrative; news.
R E S U M O
O projeto Tampa Tarot combina histórias interativas na Web e um recurso de Realidade Aumentada (RA) que mostra cartões virtuais de tarot nos smartpho-nes dos utilizadores em localizações geográficas específicas por toda a cidade. O projeto tenta responder à seguinte pergunta: num mundo de meios de co-municação difusos e fragmentados, onde lugares e histórias antigas são deslo-cados e obscurecidos por camadas de imagens desconectadas e uma popula-ção em crescimento e mudança, como entendemos quem somos enquanto comunidade? Enfatizando o caráter intrinsecamente social e histórico do tarot, o projeto emprega a estrutura narrativa da cartomancia (leitura de cartas) como uma forma de contar estórias da comunidade.
P A L A V R A S - C H A V E
Tarot; Tampa; comunidade; contar estórias; narrativa; notícias.
2 00 S T E PH A N IE T R IP P
or years, business and civic leaders in my hometown of Tampa, Florida,
have engaged in periodic bouts of hand-wringing over the city’s identity.
As with local leaders in many cities, their anxieties center on economic
development and manifest themselves during discussions of branding and tour-
ism campaigns. As the city prepared to host the Republican National Convention
in 2012, local boosters fretted that Tampa was too nondescript: “Florida’s met-
ropolitan areas have well-established identities — Orlando for its theme parks
and Miami for international flair. But, what is Tampa Bay’s identity?” (“Ad2
Event Recap”, 2012). While the trifling preoccupations of promotional cam-
paigns may seem unlikely prompts for humanities research, something in that
seemingly banal question resonated with greater significance, something that
sparked my interest as a media scholar. I re-frame the question this way: In a
world of diffuse and fragmented media, where old places and stories are dis-
placed and obscured by layers of disconnected images and a growing, changing
population, how do we understand who we are as a community? My response, at
the risk of sounding glib, is to tell the city’s fortune. To do so, I have developed
Tampa Tarot.
Tampa Tarot is a community art project that on one level is a fun or interest-
ing way to learn about the city’s history and culture, but on another is an exper-
iment in alternative knowledge legitimation grounded in electronic social net-
working technologies. Starting from the concept of psychogeography, a term
defined by French cultural theorist Guy Debord (1955) as “the study of the pre-
cise laws and specific effects of the geographical environment, consciously or-
ganized or not, on the emotions and behaviors of individuals,” Tampa Tarot at-
tempts to evoke a community’s collective dream of its own identity and destiny.
The project currently resides on testing servers, but once it launches people will
be able to encounter Tampa Tarot through two interfaces: a website that de-
scribes the project and generates tarot card readings and an augmented reality
(AR) application that displays virtual cards that I have designed in locations
throughout the city. In addition, members of the community will be encouraged
to participate in the project by producing their own tarot cards that offer com-
plementary or contrasting community narratives.
F
T A M PA TA RO T 2 0 1
Figure 1.
Tampa Tarot adopts many conventions of popular tarot decks and reading
practices to make its interfaces as familiar and intuitive to users as possible. The
web-based card-reading interface randomly deals a spread from a deck of sev-
enty-eight cards composed of twenty-two “trump” cards known as the Major
Arcana and four suits of fourteen cards each. The trumps take us through a jour-
ney of innocence, initiation, temptation, sin, and redemption, just as they do in traditional tarot decks. The figures and events they depict have been modified
to reflect Tampa’s people, history, and mythology, but their meanings are in-
tended to coincide in spirit with other decks. The suits of Bolts, Doubloons, Es-
tuary, and Swords in the Tampa Tarot correspond to those of Wands, Coins/Pen-
tacles, Cups, and Swords featured in Waite-Smith and other popular decks.1
Interactive readings are generated using the Celtic Cross spread, probably the
most recognizable card-reading arrangement. The spread was popularized in
the early twentieth century by Arthur Edward Waite, who described it as “the
most suitable for obtaining an answer to a definite question.” Although many
users no doubt will approach the reading as a tool for personal divination, in-
structions on the website encourage visitors to frame their questions around the
entire Tampa community.
My work on this project began as a more playful exploration of how resi-
dents perceive their community identity in the age of networked electronic me-
dia, but its focus has shifted during the intervening years as the stakes for defin-
ing and sanctioning common knowledge have increased. With the rise of social
1 Known also as the Rider-Waite deck, this set of cards was drawn by Smith based on instructions
provided by Waite, a scholar and mystic. In recent years, the Waite-Smith name has grown more prevalent as scholars have sought to more fully recognize Smith’s role in the work.
2 02 S T E PH A N IE T R IP P
media over the past decade, the effects of what Eli Pariser has described as “the filter bubble” (2011) have eroded our shared sense of community and, with it, a
mutual understanding of the world around us that underpins our ability to make
collective decisions. As Zeynep Tufekci notes,
Social media’s business model financed by ads paid out based on number of pageviews
makes it not just possible but even financially lucrative to spread misinformation,
propaganda, or distorted partisan content that can go viral in algorithmically en-
trenched echo chambers. (2017: 241)
We witness this phenomenon globally in the rejection of scientific consen-
sus on climate change by the president of the United States, no less. But we see
it also in our communities. An example from my community arose in June 2017
when a large number of residents rejected a sand renourishment plan to protect
beach communities on Florida’s Gulf Coast from storm surge even though these
renourishment programs have been implemented without controversy for dec-
ades to the great benefit of our barrier islands (Douglas, 2017). While many in-
terpret the increasing lack of consensus regarding the most basic states of affairs
as a problem that must be corrected within the paradigm of literacy—such as
increasing the use of fact checkers, for example—these perspectives underesti-
mate the extent to which our culture exists in a world no longer governed by the
conventions of print culture.
Benedict Anderson (1983) has described the confluence of printing press,
capitalism, and the nation state that emerged half a millennium ago to shape our
modern world as “print capitalism.” In Imagined Communities, his seminal work
on nationalism, he posits that, under print capitalism, thousands—even mil-
lions—of strangers could consider themselves “Brazilians” or “Germans” or
“Japanese” or “Canadians” even to the point of sacrificing themselves, even
though these entities really are contrivances, “imagined communities,” that forge common identities based around shared language and cultural practices.
In a much-cited example, he writes of the silent newspaper reader who “is well
aware that the ceremony he performs is being replicated by thousands (or mil-
lions) of others of whose existence he is confident, yet of whose identity he has
not the slightest notion” (35). The power of that image to comprehend social
cohesion is now belied by its belatedness. We have spent the past two decades in
the twilight of print capitalism, and as we watch the more tangible elements of
the apparatus give way we must consider what else will ebb with it.
The decline of newspapers and its attendant toll on accountability journal-
ism has been chronicled by scholars for more than a decade.2 The effects are
manifest not only in the thousands of professional journalists thrown out of
work but also in the physical structures of our cities, which were shaped largely
by twentieth-century communications technologies. New York’s Rockefeller
2 See Henry, 2007; Jones, 2009; and Madigan, 2007.
T A M PA TA RO T 2 03
Center, whose modern towers have housed some of the most powerful media organizations of the last century—RCA, NBC, and the Associated Press—is an ob-
vious example of the powerful influence of broadcast-model media on our urban
landscapes. Although Rockefeller Center still stands, the locus of media power
has shifted far west of midtown Manhattan to the sprawling office parks of Sili-
con Valley. Locally, the effects on our cities are more tangible as landmark build-
ings that once held the trappings of centralized media authority within a com-
munity—the gatekeepers, philanthropists, and sports franchise owners—have
been repurposed or erased altogether. In my city, the downtown headquarters
for The Tampa Tribune for more than forty years met the wrecking ball in early
2017. For several weeks during the spring, video of the demolition filled my so-
cial media feeds alongside the latest political outrages and the perpetual calls to
end “fake news.” The choice riverfront lot will soon house luxury condomini-
ums. I have marked the location with a virtual tarot card.
Figure 2.
2 0 4 S T E PH A N IE T R IP P
Yet to leave the Tarot there, as a farewell postcard to print capitalism, does not even vaguely satisfy. To respond to “What is Tampa Bay’s identity?” with “I
have divined the future and it’s not that old newspaper plant anymore” will not
suffice. Such as response does not get at that deeper, more urgent question of
what the Tarot can teach us about who we are as a community. To accomplish
that, it is necessary to understand the cultural history of tarot cards and how
much of that history involved collective rather than individual practices of sig-
nification.
Contemporary industrialized culture understands the Tarot within the con-
text of individual beliefs and concerns. Tarot card readings have been compared
in popular culture and even in some scholarly work to Hermann Rorschach’s
inkblot tests—in other words, as instances of individual psychological projec-
tion. For example, Paul Martin Lester’s Visual Communication: Images with Mes-
sages, groups Tarot cards, the I-Ching, astrology, and ink blots as examples of
“projection,” which he describes as a type of mental activity that affects visual
perception (Lester, 2011: 63-64). A quiz on the website of the Science Channel’s
Oddities San Francisco series (2012-13) noted that some psychologists “might see
tarot as a way of accessing a subject’s subconscious through that person’s free
associations in reaction to images, much like a Rorschach test” (“Tarot Quiz”).
Yet portrayals such as these miss the intrinsically social and historical character
of the Tarot and its narrative structure. With origins tracing back to at least the
late Middle Ages in Europe, the Tarot draws on powerful cultural narratives that
often frame the subject of a reading within the bounds of social approbation or
condemnation. Those narratives were most prominently depicted in the Tri-
umphs, which were allegorical pageants enacted in cities throughout Europe.
Triumph narratives, such as Petrarch’s Il Trionfi in the fourteenth century, fol-
lowed the tradition of The Psychomachia, the story of the soul’s journey through
life and death written in Spain in the fifth century CE (Thomson, 1930: 109-112).
The pageant processionals contained a series of carts depicting a portion of the
story, with later carts triumphing over or “trumping” the carts preceding them
(Huson, 2004: 30-31). The Triumphs were prevalent in Renaissance popular cul-
ture, and illustrated versions appeared “on Marriage chests, tapestries, relief
carvings, and other decorative arts” (Place, 2010: 17). Robert Place, a well-known
Tarot scholar and artist, notes that these illustrations, however intricate they
may appear to us today, were cultural commonplaces whose lessons for the ob-
server would have been obvious. He states that, “Instead of coming from the
text, these illustrations seem to be informed by the popular symbolism of the
day, possibly from the depiction of these characters in actual parades. All of
these images were popular at the time of its creation and were as easily recog-
nized as Santa Claus or Uncle Sam is now” (2010: 17). Tarot cards themselves
appear to have been quite popular in Renaissance Europe, and, although surviv-
ing examples are mostly from hand-painted decks commissioned by wealthy pa-
trons and treated as objets d’art, numerous inexpensive decks were produced
T A M PA TA RO T 2 0 5
from woodcuts and engravings (9). Thus, the meanings of tarot cards were com-monly understood, and the stories that emerged from card readings would have
been situated within knowledge of everyday actions and values of the commu-
nity.
If we are, indeed, entering an era in which our understanding of facts is no
longer rooted in a sense of sharing the day’s accounts with thousands of other
newspaper readers or television viewers, then exploring the Tarot may provide
insight into what may comprise our new imagined communities. The Tampa Ta-
rot project will allow me to test that hypothesis. Can a set of seventy-eight local
cards sorted on a website and arrayed virtually around the city approximate a
shared cultural experience or a point of common understanding? Can they do
any more than amuse us, or perhaps teach us a little local history? Those answers
have yet to be divined. In the meantime, I will conclude with one final image.
On a street corner in Central Tampa near where the construction of an in-
terstate decimated a vibrant African-American community forty years ago,
stands the Three of Swords. Known to many tarot enthusiasts as the Sorrow card,
it is depicted in the Waite-Smith deck as a heart pierced by three swords, and it
portends deep sadness and painful truths. In the Tampa Tarot version, the three
swords plunge into a palmetto thicket outside of Fort Brooke, the U.S. military
outpost established during the Seminole Indian Wars and around which the city
grew. That old fort stands for many things, but in this case, it stands for insides
and outsides, and for enforcing what goes where, in much the same way that the
construction of highways does. In 1967, a Tampa police officer shot a young black
man named Martin Chambers in the back because he suspected him of robbing
a pawn shop in the Central Avenue district. Days of riots followed. Scores of busi-
nesses along Central Avenue were burned and looted, and within a few years the
interstate came through and finished off what was left. An investigation soon
after Chambers’ death ruled that the police shooting was justified, a decision
that bitterly divided the city and continues to resonate five decades later. Sub-
sequent attempts to hold police accountable for the shooting, including an offi-
cial request by the City of Tampa as recent as 2008, have been unsuccessful
(Guzzo, 2017; Hutcheson, 2007; Morrow, 2017). That is the story of my city’s sor-
row. A few years ago, the city dedicated a portion of a park to commemorate
Central Avenue. Near its entrance resides my own commemoration, the aug-
mented reality Three of Sorrows, speaking its painful truth.
2 06 S T E PH A N IE T R IP P
Figure 3.
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“Ad 2 Event Recap: Branding Tampa Bay” (2012). Ad 2 Tampa Bay, 20 July 2012, www.ad2tampabay.org. 30 March 2016.
ANDERSON, Benedict (1983). Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. Rev. ed. London: Verso.
DEBORD, Guy (1955). “Introduction to a Critique of Urban Geography.” Les Lèvres Nues 6 (1955). Trans-lated by Ken Knabb. Situationist International Online, www.cddc.vt.edu/sionline/presitu/geogra-phy.html .
DOUGLAS, Mark (2017). “You Paid for It: Property Owners Draw Line in the Sand Against Beach Renour-ishment Project.” WFLA Channel 8, 23 June 2017, www.wfla.com. 30 June 2017.
GUZZO, Paul (2017). “Racism in Tampa Boiled Over 50 Years Ago into Central Avenue Riots.” Tampa Bay Times, 7 June 2017, www.tampabay.com/news/humaninterest/racism-in-tampa-boiled-over-50-years-ago-into-central-avenue-riots/2326360.
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T A M PA TA RO T 2 07
LESTER, Paul Martin (2011). Visual Communication: Images with Messages. 5th ed. Boston: Wadsworth-Cen-gage.
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© 2018 Stephanie Tripp. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).
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